The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, January 27, 1989, Image 8

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    Spring Break fl [Problem Pregnancy?
*>\Ve listen, We care, We help
•Free Pregnancy Tests
^Concerned Counselors
Page 8 The Battalion
Friday 27,1989
Brazos Valiev
Crisis Pregnancy Sei-vice
We’re Local!
JLAPY AAIDEAS v* AMY ACCiAS
AAKDAAS W *' AGO/AS
SATURDAY
696-1228 • 846-6934
1-800-BEACH-BUM
i Campbell’s Ozarks
Country Jubilee
Satuarday, Jan. 28th
2 Shows: 3-5 p.m. or 7-9 p.m.
Admission:
$5 in advance $6 at the door
Where: Bryan Civic Auditorium
800 S. Coulter Bryan
Advance tickets available: Tip Top Records
1005 S. Coulter, Anderson Trailer Sales, 106 Royal
Mikes Grocery, 707 East 23rd Street
For Information call 693-0777
Come out and enjoy this great family entertainment!
Stulce
(Continued from page 7)
Lunch Buffet
(11-2 Daily)
Dinner Buffet
(5-8pm Daily)
w/coupon
Gourmet Chinese Food, More than 15 items
All you can eat • Free Iced Tea
Pacific Garden Chinese
Restaurant
self. If you’ve done the work you feel
a lot better than if you’ve just goofed
around.”
Stulce isn’t very big on goofing
around. He moved off campus be
cause he felt he could concentrate on
his studies better. A sophomore gen
eral studies major, he takes school-
work seriously.
But he can also understand Bar
nes’s decision to quit school for a
while and go into full-time competi
tion.
“A lot of people say Randy should
have Finished up. But, for him, I
think it was the best thing to do,”
Stulce said. “You’re only young once
and you try to make that last as long
as you can.
“Being in college, you can’t really
master both (shotputting and stud
ies), I think, and keep your sanity.
Training with him and getting his
opinion on it, you can kind of under
stand. He’s never young twice.”
Somehow, Stulce is going to try
and get the most of both academics
and shotputting at A&M. But, if
things go as planned, he will con
tinue throwing the shot after he
graduates.
“After the degree, I’ll try to go as
long as possible — until it seems like
it’s going to play out,” he said.
He also plans to put forth an ef
fort to make the next Olympic team,
but you never know what will hap
pen in four years, he said.
Stulce relishes his relationship
with A&M’s other thrower, Patrik
Hennings of Sweden.
He said they are always compet
itive with one another and try to
push each other as much as possible.
There is also a soft spot in his
heart for Johan Svensson, a former
A&M shotputter.
“If there’s anyone I want to see do
good, it’s them — being together so
much and going through so much
sweat and tears,” he said.
Stulce is hopeful this season will
be a great one. He hopes to throw
over 70 feet, which would go far be
yond his previous best of 63-9'A at
last year’s SWC Championships —
the best throw in the SWC last
spring.
Looking ahead for Stulce, very
little seems out of reach.
There will be plenty of sweat, but
most of the tears should be of joy.
49ers’ Walsh quits
Seifert takes reins
Between Chimney Hill Bowl & The Hilton
Dine in only, with coupon Salads & Desserts
One coupon per person per visit New , tems Added: Varies Daily I
Chinese Fajitas on Sunday
Not good with any other coupon
Valid Jan. 27-Feb. 5,1989
Jordan remains focused
despite hitting milestone
scum MAN
THEATRES
AFTERNOON TIMES LISTED BELOW ARE FOR SAT & SUN ONLY
2.50 ADMISSION
■ 1. Any Show Before 6 PM
|2. Tuesday - AD Seats
|3. Mon.-Wed. - Local Students With Current ID'S
|4. Thur.-KORA "Over 30 night" f
SCHULMAN 6
2002 E. 29th
775-2463
| TEQUILA SUNRISE pq
4:50
0:90 |
$ DOLLAR DAYS $
1
BIG PG-13
4:4S
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A FISH CALLED WANDA "
2:20
4r3Q
7:15
*30
DIRTY ROTTEN SCOUNDREL pg-is
2:10
4:4Q
7:05
DIEHARD R
2:15
4:45
7:00
WITHOUT A CLUE
2:05
4-!M
7:10
•DENOTES DOLBY STEREO
THREE FUGITIVES pg
MANOR EAST 3
Manor East Mall 823-8300
•MSSISSIPPI BURNING n
•ACCIDENTAL TOURIST pg
OLIVER A COMPANY g III
DEEP STAR SIX R
7:20
JLUl.
S.I* «*5
ainWrtr Ntm-rtl
Phi Kappa Theta Rush
at the Holiday Inn Ballroom
Saturday January 28
Live Band. Dress as your favorite
deceased person or just wear black.
(Sweethearts also welcome)
For Details Call:
Bryan 693-7055 or Gary 696-4334
CHICAGO (AP) — Michael Jor
dan is proud of his 10,000 career
points, but he said Thursday he has
no intention of getting bogged down
in the numbers game.
“It means an awful lot to me,” Jor
dan said as he prepared for practice
with the Chicago Bulls. “It’s some
thing I will always be able to look
back on.
“But, realistically, I’m not going to
put myself in a position where I’m
thinking of 20,000 or 30,000 points.
I have a goal and that’s to help the
Bulls get an NBA championship.”
Jordan scored his 10,000th point
with his 33rd and final point
Wednesday night in the Bulls’ 120-
108 loss to the 76ers in Philadelphia.
It came in his fifth year and his
303rd game.
Only Wilt Chamberlain accom-
{ ylished the feat quicker. Chamber-
ain did it in four years and in 236
games.
Jordan might have done it in four
years had he not missed 64 games in
his second season with a foot injury.
He might not have done it
Wednesday night had he not insisted
on playing despite a knee injury suf
fered at home Tuesday night against
Dallas. He had the knee iced for 10
hours and his condition was touch-
and-go until gametime.
“He could legitimately not have
played because of that knee,” said
Bulls coach Doug Collins. “But he
went out there and, with five min
utes to go, we still had a chance to
win. It didn’t work out but from
night to night, Michael has shown
what a great competitor he is. For
me to coach him is a great honor.
“Michael is one of a special kind of
athlete who doesn’t come around of
ten” said Collins. “I played with
some great players with the 76ers.
There was Billy Cunningham,
Bobby Jones, Dr. J., and Maurice
Cheeks.
MONTEREY, Calif. (AP) — Bill
Walsh went out a winner Thursday
when he resigned as coach of the
San Francisco 49ers and joined
Vince Lombardi as the only coaches
to step down after winning a Super
Bowl.
Walsh also won the power strug
gle with owner Eddie. DeBartolo Jr.
as the 49ers selected defensive coor
dinator George Seifert as their new
head coach. DeBartolo was report
edly interested in getting a well-
known coach to take over, while
Walsh lobbied hard for Seifert.
Walsh will stay on with the 49ers
as executive vice president for foot
ball operations.
Walsh coached the 49ers to their
third Super Bowl championship of
the 1980s last Sunday, beating the
Cincinnati Bengals 20-16.
Lombardi led Green Bay to victo
ries in the first two Super Bowls
(1967-1968) and then retired to the
Packers’ front office. He later re
turned as head coach of the Wash
ington Redskins.
Relations between Walsh and De
Bartolo have frequently been frosty.
Last season, when the 49ers lost to
Minnesota in the first round of the
playoffs after compiling the league’s
best regular-season record, Walsh
lost his team president title.
But DeBartolo denied that there
was a serious rift between the two.
Earlier this month, he told report
ers, “That’s the furthest thing from
the truth that I could imagine. Bill
and I are friends, good friends.”
Walsh, who held the 49ers’ coach
ing position longer than anyone else
and is only the team’s fourth coach
with a winning record, had sttonj
endorsed Seifert, a 49-year-oldi
Francisco native who has bet
49ers’ defensive aide since 1980i!
before that assisted Walsh at Sit
ford.
Walsh, who ended hiscareerv:
an overall record of 102-631,:
eluding playoff games, joined
49ers in 1979 after t wo years as hd
coach at Stanford.
In his first season, the stumbli
49ers matched their 1978 reconi
2-14. The following year theym
6-10.
Then the fun began.
In 1981, the 49ers, with Joe
tana out of Notre Dame at qui
terback, went 13-3 and defeai
Cincinnati in the Super Bowl.
In strike-shortened 1982, l
49ers went 3-6. But they bound
back to 10-6 in 1983 and in IS
went 15-1, winning their seconds
per Bowl with a resounding viett'
over the Miami Dolphins.
They went 10-6 in 1985, 10-5
1986 and 13-2 in 1987 —but set
of dissent between Walsh and D
Bartolo were sown when San Frz
cisco lost first-round playoff gatt
all three seasons.
Last season looked to be more
the same, and the 49ers at one
were just 6-5, embroiled in a na
quarterback controversy and all I)
written off for the playoffs.
But Montana returned to for
and sent Steve Young to the bm
the team won four of its last five
go 10-6 in the regular season
swept aside Minnesota and Chica
en route to last Sunday’s drama
last-minute victory.
TANK M C NAMARA®
by Jeff Millar & Bill Hinds
APPAf?6MTLV 6AC*
IN T4£ ^
Of TMi6> FCANCHi^,
tue uueRe Miai&ry
FOR ANV nOK UU£
COUup G>£T
ClNEPLLX ODEON t $3.00 BARGAIN MATINEE DAILY
AND ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6 PM
pUlf Y H ££-|- R ££ AT SFIECTEO THEATRES CHECK SHOWTlMfS
POST OAK THREE
1500 Ilarvcy Rood
THE JANUARY MAN (R)
10
10
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WORKING GIRL (R)
2:00
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4:20
9:20
NAKED GUN (PG-13)
2:20
7:20
4:35
9:30
CINEMA THREE
315 College Ave.
TALK RADIO (R)
M-F 9:15
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Night Of Demons 00
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TWINS (PG)
2:00 4:05
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■f" AM/PM Clinics
CLINICS
Minor Emergencies
Weight Reduction Program
10% Discount With Student ID
Minimal Waiting Time
College Station
845-4756
693-0202
779-4756
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